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Suggested Citation:"References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2019. Leveraging Private Capital for Infrastructure Renewal. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/25561.
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Page 52
Page 53
Suggested Citation:"References." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2019. Leveraging Private Capital for Infrastructure Renewal. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/25561.
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Page 53

Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

52 Allen Consulting Group and the University of Melbourne. (2007). Performance of P3s and Traditional Procurement in Australia. Prepared for Infrastructure Partnerships Australia. 63 pp. Belt, B. D. (2013). Catalyzing Pension Fund Investment in the Nation’s Infrastructure. A Roundtable Discussion. Washington, D.C. Milken Institute. Bolaños, L., et al. (2017). U.S. Surface Transportation Public–Private Partnerships: Objectives and Evidence. Association for the Improvement of American Infrastructure. 14 pp. Canadian Centre for Economic Analysis. (2016). The Economic Impact of Canadian P3 Projects: Why Building Infrastructure ‘on Time’ Matters. 60 pp. Congressional Budget Office. (2012). Using Public–Private Partnerships to Carry Out Highway Projects, Jan. 2012, Available at www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/112th-congress-2011-2012/reports/01-09-PublicPrivate Partnerships.pdf. Connector 2000 Association, Inc. 10-04467-dd (U.S. Bankruptcy Court District of South Carolina June 24, 2010). Della Croce, R. (2012). Trends in Large Pension Fund Investment in Infrastructure. Paris. OECD. Duffield, C., P. Raisbeck, and M. Xu. (2008). Benchmarking Study Phase II: Report on the Performance of PPP Projects in Australia When Compared with a Representative Sample of Traditionally Procured Infrastructure Projects. Melbourne. National PPP Forum. FHWA. (2013). Financial Structuring and Assessment for Public–Private Partnerships: A Primer. FHWA. Available at www.transportation.gov/sites/dot.gov/files/docs/p3_primer_financial_assessment_1213.pdf. FHWA, Center for Innovative Finance Support. (n.d.) Project Profiles. U.S. Department of Transportation/ Federal Highway Administration, FHWA, Available at www.fhwa.dot.gov/ipd/project_profiles/. FHWA. (2012). Risk Assessment for Public–Private Partnerships: A Primer. pp. 43–44. Giglio, J. M. and J. H. Friar. (2017). An Evaluation of Availability-Based Payments for U.S. Public–Private Partnerships. Journal of Business and Economics, Vol. 8, No. 1, pp. 9–24. Government Accounting Standards Board. (2017). Statement Number 87 of the Government Accounting Standards Board. Norwalk, CT: Government Accounting Standards Board. Hellowell, M. and V. Vecchi. (2013). What Return for Risk? The Price of Equity Capital in Public–Private Partner- ships. Rethinking Public–Private Partnerships: Strategies for Turbulent Times. London. Routledge. pp. 57–77. Kinnander, O. (1999, November 11). Increasingly, Governments Look to 63–20 Financing for Projects. Bond Buyer. p. 3. Liu, T., M. Bennon, M. Garvin, and S. Wang. (2017). Sharing the Big Risk: An Assessment Framework for Revenue Risk Sharing Mechanisms in Transportation Public–Private Partnerships. Journal of Construction Engineering and Management. Mallett, W. J. (2017). Public–Private Partnerships (P3s) in Transportation. Fas.org. Available at fas.org/sgp/crs/ misc/R45010.pdf. Mercator Advisors LLC. Review of the Comprehensive Agreement for the I-77 Express Lanes Project. Available at www.ncdot.gov, Sept. 2017, www.ncdot.gov/projects/I-77ExpressLanes/download/mercator-final- report.pdf. NAO. (2012). Equity Investment in Privately Financed Projects. London. National Audit Office. National Conference of State Legislators. (2018). Transportation Funding and Finance State Bill Tracking Database. National Conference of State Legislators. Available at http://www.ncsl.org/research/transportation/ ncsl-transportation-funding-finance-legis-database.aspx. Poole, R. W. (2017). Availability Payment or Revenue Risk P3 Concessions? Pros and Cons for Highway Infrastructure. Reason.org. Available at reason.org/wp-content/uploads/files/infrastructure_availability_ payment_revenue_risk_concessions.pdf. References

References 53 PWC. (2016). Global Infrastructure Investment. The Role of Private Capital in the Delivery of Essential Assets and Services. GIIA. Public Works Financing. (2018 June). Rall, J., et al. (2010). Public–Private Partnerships for Transportation. http://www.ncsl.org, NCSL Partners Project on Public–Private Partnerships (PPPs) for Transportation, Oct. 2010. Available at www.ncsl.org/ Portals/1/Documents/transportation/PPPTOOLKIT.pdf. Reeves, E., D. Flannery, and D. Palcic. (2015). PPP Procurement in the United Kingdom: An Analysis of Tendering Periods. 19th Annual Conference of the International Society for New Institutional Economics (ISNIE), Harvard University. Cambridge, MA. Renn, M. A. (2016). The Lessons of Long-Term Privatizations: Why Chicago Got It Wrong and Indiana Got It Right. Manhattan Institute. Robbins, D. and J. V. Meulen. (2009). An Examination of 63–20 Financing. Annual Conference of the Association for Budgeting and Financial Management. Washington, D.C. Macdonald, B. L. and B. Repishti. (2017). Kiewit Meridiam Partners LLC (Central 70 Project). S&P Global Ratings. December 2017. pp. 1–15. https://www.spratings.com/documents/20184/1634005/Central70.pdf/ c55d6d4d-5773-4987-9fc4-22e7686c0d25. U.S. Department of Transportation. (2014). I-495 Capital Beltway HOT Lanes, Fairfax County, VA. U.S. DOT, United States DOT, Sept. 5, 2014. Available at www.transportation.gov/policy-initiatives/build-america/ i-495-capital-beltway-hot-lanes-fairfax-county-va. U.S. Department of Transportation. (2016). Guidebook on Financing of Highway Public–Private Partnership Projects. https://cms.dot.gov, U.S. DOT, Dec. 2016. Available at cms.dot.gov/sites/dot.gov/files/docs/ p3-toolkit_p3_project_financing_guidebook_122816.pdf. U.S. Department of Treasury. (2015). Expanding the Market for Infrastructure Public–Private Partnerships. U.S. Department of the Treasury Office of Economic Policy, U.S., Apr. 2015. Available at https://www.treasury.gov/ resource-center/economic-policy/Documents/2_Treasury%20Infrastructure%20White%20Paper%20 042215.pdf.

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Public–private partnerships (P3s) can provide solutions to the project delivery challenges faced by state departments of transportation (DOTs) and local transportation agencies in delivering surface transportation infrastructure by aligning risks and rewards between public and private sectors, accelerating project delivery, improving operations and asset management, realizing construction and operational cost savings, and attracting private-sector equity investment.

P3s are becoming an increasingly important option for financing and implementing critical improvements to U.S. surface transportation infrastructure. As interest in P3s grows, U.S. transportation agencies and stakeholders evaluating the potential benefits of P3s have raised issues relating to the role of private equity in these transactions.

Recognizing the complexity and challenges of structuring a highway or bridge P3 compared to a conventional procurement, the objective of NCHRP Synthesis 540: Leveraging Private Capital for Infrastructure Renewal is to bridge the knowledge gap on the role of equity in surface transportation P3 projects and to document current practices relating to private-equity investments in small-scale and large-scale transportation infrastructure projects.

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